"Fields" is neither masculine nor feminine. There is no masculine or feminine form.
In French, the word "science" is feminine. It is used with the feminine article "la," as in "la science." Therefore, any adjectives or modifiers used with "science" must also be in the feminine form.
The term "hamster" does not have a specific feminine or masculine form. It is a unisex noun that refers to both male and female hamsters.
Did you mean a Ram ? In which case the female equvalent is a ewe.
In French, "rain" is feminine. The word for rain is "la pluie," where "la" indicates its feminine gender. This is consistent with many other nouns in French that are also assigned a gender.
In French, the word for nature is "nature," which is feminine (la nature). This classification is based on the grammatical gender system in the French language, where nouns are assigned either masculine or feminine forms. Thus, when discussing nature in French, one would use feminine articles and adjectives.
There are two major fields of thought of why females acting "girly". Some believe that feminine behavior is an innate characteristic. Others believe that feminine behavior is learned.
feminine
"Espagne" is feminine in French.
feminine, i believe
Feminine
directeur → masculine directrice→ feminine
the feminine of he is she
Yes, la is feminine for the.
It is feminine because Mary in french (marie) is feminine so it's a females name.
Countess is the feminine term
"Fatiguée" is feminine in French.
feminine